The possessive is campus's.The possessive of a singular noun can always use apostrophe-S. It is only when the plural is formed by adding S or ES that the apostrophe only is used (e.g. campuses becomes campuses').
The possessive form of the word "its" never has an apostrophe after the "s."* The dog hurt its leg. * The peacock is proudly showing its tail. The possessive forms of pronouns in general do not have apostrophes.
The possessive form of "Doris" is "Doris's" or "Doris'." Both are generally accepted ways of showing possession for singular nouns ending in "s."
Use 's to indicate the possessive form of singular nouns, such as "Tom's car." Use s' to indicate the possessive form of plural nouns ending in s, such as "the boys' bikes."
In "workers' comp," the apostrophe should come after the "s" to indicate that the compensation is intended for multiple workers. This is the possessive form of "workers," showing that the compensation belongs to the workers.
The possessive is campus's.The possessive of a singular noun can always use apostrophe-S. It is only when the plural is formed by adding S or ES that the apostrophe only is used (e.g. campuses becomes campuses').
The possessive form of the word "its" never has an apostrophe after the "s."* The dog hurt its leg. * The peacock is proudly showing its tail. The possessive forms of pronouns in general do not have apostrophes.
The possessive form of "Doris" is "Doris's" or "Doris'." Both are generally accepted ways of showing possession for singular nouns ending in "s."
The possessive form of a noun is used to show that something belongs to that noun. Nouns show possession by the suffix -'s, or just an apostrophe after an -s for some nouns ending in -s. For example:Lilly's cat ( The word Lilly is the possessive noun, showing that the cat belongs to Lilly.)Melanie's IPodThe door's hingesThe church's pastorThe room's paint
To show possession for names ending in "z," add an apostrophe followed by an s ('s) just like with other names. For example, for the name "Jazz," the possessive form would be "Jazz's car."
Use 's to indicate the possessive form of singular nouns, such as "Tom's car." Use s' to indicate the possessive form of plural nouns ending in s, such as "the boys' bikes."
In "workers' comp," the apostrophe should come after the "s" to indicate that the compensation is intended for multiple workers. This is the possessive form of "workers," showing that the compensation belongs to the workers.
The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: Alexis's. If Alexis's seems awkward to you, you may use the Frenchified possessive "of Alexis," but never use the plural possessive form, which is to add an apostrophe after the final -s of the plural, for a singular noun.
Possession is shown by use of an apostrophe. A singular noun forms the possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word. A plural noun forms the possessive by adding an apostrophe (') after the ending s or adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of an irregular plural noun.The singular possessive form is: the boy's team.The plural possessive form is: the boys'team.
Delmo Fritz's birth name is William S. Fritz.
To check if a noun is possessive, look for the presence of an apostrophe followed by the letter "s" ('s) at the end of the noun. This indicates ownership or a relationship of belonging between the noun and another word in the sentence. For example, in the phrase "the dog's collar," "dog's" is a possessive noun showing that the collar belongs to the dog.
To make it possessive, add S at the end to spell its.(Possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe to show possession. The spelling it's is a contraction of it is.)